Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 9, 1914, Page 4

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Wedding Invitations Announcements FORTIFIED POSITIONS Austrian Retreat Not Repllsn. EXPECTED TO MAKE DETERMINED STAND Lines Extend From Cracow in South to Kalisz, London, Nov. 9.—Regarding the sit- uation in the eastern arena Petro- grad reports that the Austrians after making a final, furious onslaught on the Russian lines along the River San, have withdrawn in all directions until their front now extends from Dukla Austria is apprebensive of a Russian advance. Other advices tell of the strengthening of Austrian coast forti- fications . between Pola. and. Trieste. |Inland trenches also are being built behind Trieste. 3 In the Near .East little military or naval activity is reported. VIENNA AIDS UNEMPLOYED Women Arrange fcr “Citizens’ War . Dinners” Daily. | Vienna, Nov. 9.—For the special ben- efit of the middle class of unemployed in Vienna the Austrian women’s fran- chise committee have organized “citi- zens’ war dinners.” - A substantial meal of two courses, nicely prepared and served, is cupplied for 49 hellers (8 cents). Dining rooms have been prepared at various centers, where the meal is served between noon and 1:30 p. m® daily; or the food can be taken home if desired, but~ persons must bring their own d =s for- the pur- pose. - Among the classes benciited by this form of relief are the musicians, art- ists, engineers, teachers, commercial clerks and shop assistants of both sexes. MORE TROOPS FROM WEST Dominion Provinces Will Mobilize Four Mounted Rifie Regiments. Winnipeg, Nov. 9.—Colonel Du- charme of Winnipeg wil recruit at once a battery of field artillery, to consist of 175 men and six guns. Four regiments of mounted riftes, some 2, rass, in the Carpathian mountains, to Cracow, with a wedge extending to| Przemysl, on the San river, where the | Austrians continue to resist the Rus. slan assault. The cautious tone of the | Rugsian official statement with the’ significant admission from Vienna that | *“if the Russians in some parts of the war theater, in spite of our good posi-| tions, occupy places we recently con- quered, this is compensated by the general situation,” creates the lmpresv{‘ slon that the Austrians are regaining | their positions without suffering great | disaster. | The Petrograd correspondent of the Morning Post says the Austrian re- tirement on the Galician [ront is of such character as to indicafe less a general defeat than a strategical with- drawal to new positions in accordance with a fixed plan. Hold Strong Positions. “Although the Russians have been pressing the Austrians with great en- ergy, the Austrians are in possession of several strongly fortified positions, which still are giving the Russians « great deal of trouble,” says the Post correspondent. “The Austrians ap: pear to be retirlng to excellently for- tifled _positions resting on Cracow In the south and on Kalisz in the north. They expect to make an impregnable stand' there.” That the Austrians are improying the defenses of Cracow, the “key to| Austria,” is indicated in a dispatch from Vienra which states the Crac. v | military authovities have forbidden the return of refugees to that ¢’y and have warned the civil populat.on to keep away from the fortificatio . The Venice dispatch says this has, created the impression in Vienna that | 000 men, will be mobilized in the four western provinces. Reports received from the Royal Northwest mounted police show there are now nearly 200,000 Austrians and CGermans in the prairie provinces. Many will be employed on public works connected with the clearing up of Dominion parks and the building of roads through them next spring and others may break up and till land not now cultivated in the West. TWO BROTHERS ARE SLAIN Shot te Death While at Work in Blacksmith Shop. New York, Nov. 9.—The police of New York and Jersey City are search- ing for Gustav Martin, forty years old, a blacksmith, who shot and killed his two brothers-in-law, Raymond and George Leonard, in a blacksmith shop in Jersey City. The Leonards were twenty-one and twenty-three years old and were em- the blacksmith shops of ployed in their father, John Leonard. When Martin entered the shop Raymond was shoeing a horse and George was bending over an anvil. Martin ap- proached Raymond and fired a bullet into the back of his head. Turning upon George, Martin fired, wounding him over the heart. BOMBS KILL EIGHT MARINES Aviator Dropped Missiles in German Naptha Tanks. London, Nov. 9—An aviator from the allies’ lines dropped two bombs in German naptha tanks at Bruges, Thursday, killing eight marines, says a dispatch from Amsterdam to the Exchange Telegraph company. PRICES OF MEAT Quarantine at Chicage Atfects the Market. ‘ FUMIGATORS ARE AT WORK One Theusand Men Engaged:in Task: of Cleansing Yards and Scores of Others Are Killing Pigeons and Rats, Disease Carriers. Chicago, Nov. 9.—Meat -prices be- gan mounting following the close: of the Chicago stock yards and several smaller stock yards over the country in an effort to stamp out the foot and mouth disease. Big Chicago packers issued formal statements to- the public when the closing order .was first issued, declar- ing that the price of meats would not be affected. But reports from New York, Boston and other cities declared that the expected price increase al- | ready has gonme into effect. Chicago retail meat men have mnot advanced their meat prices, though provision futures jumped higher on the Chicago board of trade. Poultry prices, however, were ad- vanced 134 to 2% cents and eggs went 1 to 2 cents higher per dozen. ;It was reported that speculators are gambling on an increased demand for { poultry and eggs because of high beef prices, though commission men de- clared the unexpected advance in eggs and poultry is due to “naturai causes.” One thousand men were sent into the stock yards at daybreak to carry out the government orders for a thor- ough fumigation. Twenty-one com- pressed air spray machines were put into operation, shooting fine streams of a 5 per cent solution of cresol composition over fences, gates, feed troughs, :pavements and alleys. An- other force of men was Kkept busy shooting pigeons and rats. The fed- eral ingpectors declared birds and rats spread the disease rapidly. LOSS OF QUARTER MILLION Fire Sweeps Partion of Kansas City Stock Yards. Kansas City, Nov. 9.—A quarter of a miHion of dollars’ loss is the esti mate of the damage done by a fire which swept one-third of the stock- yards here. Carelessness is believed to have béen the cause. Four thousand steers and 3,000 calves were driven safely through tunnels under the Missouri Pacific tracks and saved. Hogs and sheep were penned in a part of the yards not reached by the fire. TUnusually heavy shipments of stock are -expected here because of the quarantine on the Chicago stock yards and the fire will make the handling of the shipments difficult. K paLy | $4.00 | A YEAR The BEMIDJI PIONEER ‘Daily and Weekly RO OGO OHORHHOH * WEEKLY $1.50 A Year Book, Job, Commercial and Society Packet Heads Catalogues Descriptive Booklets - Sale Bills Printing Qur Specialties : Window Cards Calling Cards Shipping Tags Statemen’s ~ Note Heads Bill Heads Envelopes ‘Dodgers >S5 ARE. ADVANCING| C. Parker, one of ' st known at- torneys of thé Towa bar, died suddenly omg fere after an fliness of a ‘Weismann, thé famous zoologist, is dead 'at Freipurg.- He was born in Frankfort in 1834. (OB SIGE T INTO GRAY Ladies! Try'this! Darkens beauti- fully-and nobody can tell—Brings }nck its gloss and thickness. : ir Common garden sage brewed into beavy tea, with sulphur and alcohol added, will turn gray, streaked and fuded hair beautifully dark aad luxuri- ant; remove every bit of dandruff, stop scalp itching and falling hair. ~ Mixing the Sagé Tea and Sulphur recipe at home, though, is troublesome. An easier way is | to get the ready-to-use - tonic, costing about 50 cents a large bottle, at drug stores, known Jas “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphtir Hair Hemedy,” thus avoiding 8 lot of muss. While wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all Gésire to retain our youth- ful appearance and attractiveness, B darkening your, hair with Wyeth’s Sage nd Sulphur, o one can tell, because it foes it so naturally, so evenly. .You just dapen 4 sponge or soft brush with t and draw this through your hair, aking one small strand b & time; by morning all gray hairs have disappered. After anothor npplieation or two vour hair becomes eautifully dark, glossy, soft and luxnriant and you appear years younger. 7t jnumber 21,669. Puts Up Bars. 2 Nov. 9.—Governor J. M. Carey has forbidden the ship- ment into the state of cattle, sheep or | sWi from points east of the eastern boundaries of the Dakotas, Nebraska,, Kansas, Cklahoma and Texas. He or- dered a rigid inspection of all stock within the stat = Come all to the oyster supper at the Baptist church, Wednesday, Nov. 11. Price 35c.—Adv. Female stenographers in Chicago | —_— (Bank No. 882.; i STATEMENT LF TEE CONDITION OF SECURITY STATE OF BE- MIDJI, MINN. AT CLOSE OF BUSI- NESS ON OCTOBER 31, 1914— Date of call by Superintendent, Octo- ber 31, 1914. Resource! Loans and Discounts Overdrafts 'Bonds and Sec Banking _House, and Fixtures .. Other Real Estate . Due from Banks ...$31,038.7 Cash on Hand ....." 9,595.0: Checks and Cash Total $148,450.44 215.86 18,340:13 11,157.79 1/678.28 Furniture 8 10,633.82 1,747.04 Liabilities. Capital Stock and Surplus...$ 31,000.00 Undivided Profits, Net . 'Deposits Total Amount o Amount of Reserve Required 2,606.7 188,616.69 $222,223.36 $ 40,633.82 20,360.00 ss i County_of Beltrami. ) We, E. J. Swedback, President, and H. C. Baer, Cashier of the above named |Bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best-of our knowledge and belief. E. J. SWEDBACK, President. H. C. BAER, [\ Cashier. Correct Attest: (Two Directors) E. J. SWEDBACK, H. C. BAER. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 7th day of November, 1914. (Seal) A. 'E. FEIR, Notary Public, Beltrami County, Minnesota. My Commission expires Dec. 2, 1919. 1td 119 ‘ $222,223.36 | - ne of the biggest sales ever con- ducted in' the city is the one now in progress at Troppman’s department store. ed the sale today. When the doors| opened at 8 o'clock nearly 200 peo- ple were in line to pick the bargains offered. " The blankets offered during the first hour of the sale actually went like “‘hot cakes.” This store offered 200 full-sized 60x76 blankets at 29¢ each. The bargain for tomorrow will be 10 yards of the best 12 1-2¢ outing flannel for 69¢. The management of the store promises to_give during each day of this greati@ Organizing sale some extra special bargain. ‘Watch the columns of the Pioneer for these extra announcements.— Adv. An oyster supper will be served by the ladies of the Baptist church from 715 to 7 p. m., Wednesday, Nov. 11, in ithe church basement.—Adv. Kentucky Forests Burn. Lexington, Ky., Nov. 9.—Forest fires in the Black and Cumberland moun- tains, Eastern, Kentucky, destroyed thousands - of -- dollars’ timber. Many homes are threatened. There has been no rain in this part of ‘the state for weeks. Don’t forget the oyster supper at the Baptist church, Wednesday, Nov. 11. Price 35c.—Adv. Countess Fanny Zampini Salazer of Rome is the leader of the wo- 'man’s movement in Italy. Thousands of people attend-|. worth of | Take a glass of 8alts if your Back . hurts or Bladder bothers—Meat _ forms uric acid. 1If you must have your meat every da; eat it, but fush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted authority who tells us that meat forms urie acid which almost paralyzes the kidneys in their ef- forts to expel it from the blood. become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets -cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often’ get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three time during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body’s urinous waste get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; take o tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days { and your kidneys will then act fine.- This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with Tithia, and has been used for genérations to flush and stimulate’ sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. | Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- jure, and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink. l A paper drinking cup that is un- folded by the weight of water flowing into it has been invented. I Japan recently launched a battle- | ship with_all of its engines and guns in place. o Soui” 3 Thousands Attended This Sale Mon The above represents what actuallly happened Ion the first day of our LISTEN TO THIS ONE 10 yards best 12, cent - OUTING FLANNEL - 69c¢ Remember that during this Tremendous Price Cutting Sale every article will be sacrificed. Disc(iunts of from 10 to 50 per cent on everything in this store. Nothing teserved. Watch the papers for daily Extra Special Bargains. Big Department Store GREAT RE-ORGANIZING SALE | Hundreds of people were waiting for the doors to open at eight o’clock Monday morning and throughout the day thousands made purchases. have been waiting for this sale with the keenest interest and you have our assurance that it is the biggest bargain event ever before offered in Bemidji. Every day new bargains will be offered and these new bargains will be bigger and better each succeeding day. : You = e o w

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